This paper describes 19 cases of lateral meniscal cysts treated arthroscopically using an outside-in technique. In all patients, a horizontal or radial lesion (or both) of the meniscus was present. After the meniscal lesion was arthroscopically removed, the cyst was decompressed both from inside and percutaneously from outside with a motorized instrument introduced through a transmeniscal approach. The follow-up ranged from 2 to 5 years with an average of 3.3 years. On the basis of the evaluation scale developed by Cerullo et al. (1991), the results were rated excellent or good in 17 patients and fair in 2. No patient had cyst recurrence. The computed tomography follow-up examination, done in 10 of the 19 patients after an average of 3 years, showed a good remodeling of the meniscus. One of the two patients with a fair result had hypermobility of the posterior horn of the lateral meniscus due to the resection of the meniscal tissue overlying the popliteus tendon, whereas the other had pain and patellar crepitation owing to a preexisting patellofemoral abnormality.

Arthroscopic treatment of lateral meniscal cysts using an outside-in technique

Tudisco, Cosimo;
2000-01-01

Abstract

This paper describes 19 cases of lateral meniscal cysts treated arthroscopically using an outside-in technique. In all patients, a horizontal or radial lesion (or both) of the meniscus was present. After the meniscal lesion was arthroscopically removed, the cyst was decompressed both from inside and percutaneously from outside with a motorized instrument introduced through a transmeniscal approach. The follow-up ranged from 2 to 5 years with an average of 3.3 years. On the basis of the evaluation scale developed by Cerullo et al. (1991), the results were rated excellent or good in 17 patients and fair in 2. No patient had cyst recurrence. The computed tomography follow-up examination, done in 10 of the 19 patients after an average of 3 years, showed a good remodeling of the meniscus. One of the two patients with a fair result had hypermobility of the posterior horn of the lateral meniscus due to the resection of the meniscal tissue overlying the popliteus tendon, whereas the other had pain and patellar crepitation owing to a preexisting patellofemoral abnormality.
2000
adult
article
clinical article
cyst
female
human
joint mobility
knee arthroscopy
knee meniscus
male
patellofemoral joint
priority journal
surgical technique
treatment outcome
Adult
Arthroscopy
Cysts
Decompression
Surgical
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Male
Menisci
Tibial
Middle Aged
Recurrence
Tomography
X-Ray Computed
Treatment Outcome
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14245/4751
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